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Confinement resonances in the photoionization of Ar@C60 and C60 | 1396
Journal of Physical Chemistry & Biophysics

Journal of Physical Chemistry & Biophysics
Open Access

ISSN: 2161-0398

+44 1478 350008

Confinement resonances in the photoionization of Ar@C60 and C60


International Conference and Exhibition on Lasers, Optics & Photonics

October 07-09, 2013 Hilton San Antonio Airport, TX, USA

J. Jose

Posters: J Phys Chem Biophys

Abstract :

Photoionization of Ar encaged at the center of C 60 is studied in the present work in the single-channel static exchange approximation. The present work is devoted to the analysis of the photoionization of Ar@C 60 by applying the Schwinger variational method in the static-exchange approximation using the ePolyscat code. The realistic confinement potential employed in the present work explicitly includes the position of each carbon atoms on the C 60 , which is a considerable improvement over the existing methods to address the structure and photo dynamics of confined system where the carbon shell is modeled by a uniform model potential. In the present study, photoionization from the deepest of the valence shells of C 60 and Ar is considered. Significant differences in the resonances are observed as a result of encapsulation. Though there are differences in the shapes of the resonant features in the cross sections, the resonant state wave functions exhibit similarities between the different resonances of Ar@C 60 and C 60 . This proves that the confinement resonance in the atomic cross section borrows its properties predominantly from the resonance in the C 60 cage. Thus, even neglecting the effects of coupling to the many other open ionization channels in this system, we see that the realistic multi-center static-exchange cage potential can support one-electron resonances and these resonances appear both in the ionization of the endohedral atom as well as in ionization of cage electrons.

Biography :

J. Jose has completed his Ph.D. at the age of 27 years from Indian Institute of Technology, Madras in the field of negative ion photodetachment and postdoctoral studies from Indian Institute of Technology, Mandi. He is currently a postdoctoral researcher in Texas A&M University with Dr. R. R. Lucchese.

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